Watch the moment a massive and unaware wild 'Boar King' gobbles food from a garbage bin in front of a primary school in Hong Kong. Read All Comments: http://www.comentarismo.com/news/dailymailferal-pigs-eat-from-garbage-bin-near-school-in-hong-kong-daily-mail-online

Dr. Mohammed Rahman, a lecturer in Criminology at Birmingham City University, told MailOnline gang violence now poses a bigger threat to residents in the UK than terrorism. Read All Comments: http://www.comentarismo.com/news/dailymailbritains-feral-gangs-are-now-a-bigger-danger-than-terrorism-daily-mail-online

Football has increasingly become a sport judged on tangibles. This is the age of expected goals and big chances, of statisticians sitting behind laptops and pundits sitting in front of touch screens looking for definite reasons to explain why results happen. The discourse has changed and can be illuminating. Equally, it can be needlessly complicated and corrosive. Because, at its heart, football is just how Bill Shankly described it: “terribly simple”. Yes, there are laws and regulations but none so overbearing as to wreck the flow of a game should those involved be in the mood to put on a show. It is easy to follow and, crucially, open to being affected not only by talent but emotion. Which brings us on to what occurred at Anfield on Wednesday evening. In case you missed it, Manchester City were hammered. The best team in the country, champions-elect no less, reduced to wrecks by rampant hosts, and if one image summed up the torment it was that of Pep Guardiola striding to the edge of his technical area midway through the first half and gesturing to his side to stay calm. Liverpool were 2-0 up; soon afterwards they scored again and there was nothing City’s manager or players could do about it. How did this happen? Most will point to Liverpool excellent display as the principal cause. Quite right, too. But something else was also at play, an inexplicable, intangible force. How do I know? Because I helped create it. Read All Comments: http://www.comentarismo.com/news/theguardianwild-furious-almost-feral-from-the-kop-this-felt-like-a-collective-triumph-football-the-guardian

Football has increasingly become a sport judged on tangibles. This is the age of expected goals and big chances, of statisticians sitting behind laptops and pundits sitting in front of touch screens looking for definite reasons to explain why results happen. The discourse has changed and can be illuminating. Equally, it can be needlessly complicated and corrosive. Because, at its heart, football is just how Bill Shankly described it: “terribly simple”. Yes, there are laws and regulations but none so overbearing as to wreck the flow of a game should those involved be in the mood to put on a show. It is easy to follow and, crucially, open to being affected not only by talent but emotion. Which brings us on to what occurred at Anfield on Wednesday evening. In case you missed it, Manchester City were hammered. The best team in the country, champions-elect no less, reduced to wrecks by rampant hosts, and if one image summed up the torment it was that of Pep Guardiola striding to the edge of his technical area midway through the first half and gesturing to his side to stay calm. Liverpool were 2-0 up; soon afterwards they scored again and there was nothing City’s manager or players could do about it. How did this happen? Most will point to Liverpool excellent display as the principal cause. Quite right, too. But something else was also at play, an inexplicable, intangible force. How do I know? Because I helped create it. Read All Comments: http://www.comentarismo.com/news/theguardianwild-furious-almost-feral-from-the-kop-this-felt-like-a-collective-triumph-football-the-guardian

Nick Pentecost was out on a walk in the Preseli Hills in Pembrokeshire, Wales, on Saturday, when he suddenly spotted a figure on the horizon. He quickly realised it was a naked 'feral' man. Read All Comments: http://www.comentarismo.com/news/bbcukrambler-photographs-naked-feral-looking-man-in-wales-daily-mail-online

An extract from the downloadable audiobook edition of An Abundance of Katherine's, from New York Times bestelling author John Green.
When it comes to relationships, Colin Singleton's type is girls named Katherine. And when it comes to girls named Katherine, Colin is always getting dumped. Nineteen times, to be exact. On a road trip miles from home, this anagram-happy, washed-up child prodigy has ten thousand dollars in his pocket, a bloodthirsty feral hog on his trail, and an overweight Judge Judy - loving best friend riding shotgun - but no Katherines. Colin is on a mission to prove The Theorem of Underlying Katherine Predictability, which he hopes will predict the future of any relationship, avenge Dumpees everywhere, and finally win him the girl.
Love, friendship, and a dead Austro-Hungarian archduke add up to surprising and heart-changing conclusions in this ingeniously layered comic novel about reinventing oneself.
** From the New York Times bestselling author of The Fault in Our Stars and Looking for Alaska, John Green.
** John has a huge online presence through his 1.1 million Twitter followers and YouTube channel Vlogbrothers, which has been viewed over 200 million times and has 660,000 subscribers, making it one of the most successful online channels in history.